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Living on the street : social organisation and gender relations of Australian street kids

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by Hilary WinchesterHilary Winchester, L Costello
The resurgence and visibility of homelessness since the 1980s have become significant social and political issues, widely debated in academic circles and in the popular press. The composition of the homeless population has changed markedly in this period, and now includes more women and children, and more of the deinstitutionalised mentally ill. The lives of street kids in the city of Newcastle, Australia show patterns of structured behaviour and territorial and social organisation. They have a distinctive group identity and moral order. Their subculture is complex with strains of nonpatriarchal and patriarchal relations combined with little tolerance of forms of difference. The moral code of the youth subculture may be a form of resistance to their histories of abuse but is also conservative in reproducing aspects of the culture that they resist. The social networks generated on the street provide a self-maintaining force which contributes to a culture of chronic homelessness.

History

Volume

13

Issue

3

Start Page

329

End Page

348

Number of Pages

20

eISSN

1472-3433

ISSN

0263-7758

Location

United Kingdom

Publisher

Pion Ltd.

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

Department of Geography and Environmental Science;

Era Eligible

  • No

Journal

Environment and planning D : society and space.

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